My Rugby League World Cup team of the tournament

By Greg Prichard / Expert

What a blast the 2017 Rugby League World Cup has been so far – and now that we’ve reached the quarter-final stage, it’s going to get even better!

The task of picking a team of the tournament from the 14 sides that contested the pools section is difficult – there were so many terrific performers.

You’ve got to take into account the quality of the opposition in some cases, but you’ve also got to recognise and reward the up-and-coming nations.

I’ve settled on a 13 that includes at least a couple of players whom many will regard as surprise selections.

It’s a mix of four players each from Australia and Tonga – including an all-Aussie-Tonga forward pack – two from England, and one each from New Zealand, Fiji and Papua New Guinea.

So here goes:

Fullback: Roger Tuivasa-Sheck (New Zealand)
RTS has powered the Kiwis from out of the back, with a massive total of 657 run metres in his three games.

Even when New Zealand lost to Tonga, he still came up with 222 metres, four line-breaks and two tries.

All up, he has three tries, seven line-breaks, two line-break assists, four try assists and three offloads. He has been the excitement machine we all knew he could be at this level.

Wing: Jermaine McGillvary (England)
Excellent finisher who has been building throughout this tournament. Came up with 218 metres, five line-breaks and two tries in his 65 minutes as the Poms completed their pool duties with a 36-6 win over France on Sunday.

Has had a win at the judiciary as well, where he was found not guilty of biting Lebanon’s Robbie Farah. He’ll be hungry for more tries in the finals.

Centre: Michael Jennings (Tonga)
It was a shame injury ruled him out of Tonga’s huge game against the Kiwis, but they went on to get a win without him.

He was typically elusive during their first two games, producing the speed and skill that balances with the team’s power play through the forwards.

He has run for 270 metres in his two games, scoring five tries and registering three line-breaks, two line-break assists and one offload.

(Photo by Chris Hyde/Getty Images)

Centre: Josh Dugan (Australia)
‘Doogs’ cops plenty of criticism from people who think he shouldn’t be in either the New South Wales or Australian teams, but he continues to aim up. He’s not your classic centre, but he gets the job done in his own fashion.

In two games he has scored two tries and made two line-breaks, two offloads and registered one try assist, all while running for 389 metres.

Wing: Suliasi Vunivalu (Fiji)
He scores at virtually one try per game for Melbourne Storm in the NRL, so it’s no surprise he’s been a sensation in the World Cup. He’s always a chance of getting across the line and has spread his tries out, with two bags of three and one double.

The way Fiji play, Vunivalu is not going to be starved of the ball and he is a joy to watch, with his fantastic combination of speed, power and skill out wide.

Five-eighth: Gareth Widdop (England)
The classiest player the Poms have got. Came up with the assist for their only try in an 18-4 loss to Australia that opened the tournament and was influential again in their win over Lebanon. Displayed his versatility by switching to fullback, where England have injury problems, against France.

Widdop has run for 365 metres and scored one try. He also has one line-break, three line-break assists and three try assists.

(NRLPhotos/Gregg Porteous)

Halfback: Watson Boas (Papua New Guinea)
Sure, it’s a selection out of left field, but the Kumuls have gone through the pool stage unbeaten, scoring 128 points at an average of 42.6 per game, and Boas has been a driving force with his two tries, two try assists, three line-breaks and three line-break assists.

While there are obviously much bigger names running around for the heavyweight teams in this competition, none of them have dominated.

(Photo by Bradley Kanaris/Getty Images)

Prop: David Klemmer (Australia)
The big fellow has been typically hard to bring to a halt in his three games – two as a starter and the other from the bench. He has run for 440 metres and nearly half of those (202) are post-contact metres.

The Aussies have a formula based on starting with the power that Klemmer and his front-row partner, Aaron Woods, produce up front and it’s working well.

Hooker: Cameron Smith (Australia, captain)
There are several other players performing well in the dummy-half role, but the evergreen Dally M Player of the Year still holds sway with his skill, big-match know-how, excellent decision-making and tremendous consistency.

No matter how old he gets, he continues to put the defence in two minds and backs up that wizardry with a big commitment in defence and a great kicking game.

(Image: NRL)

Prop: Sio Siua Taukeiaho (Tonga)
It would have been easy to just throw Woods in as the other prop, alongside Klemmer, but this bloke deserves a big pat on the back for his efforts in a powerhouse Tongan pack.

Across three games he has run for 558 metres, including 233 post-contact. He delivered 161 metres from 17 runs in his 50 minutes when Tonga beat the Kiwis in the most eagerly-anticipated match of the tournament.

Second-row: Boyd Cordner (Australia)
Whether it’s for Sydney Roosters, NSW or Australia, Cordner is consistently among the hardest-working and most effective forwards in the game. He’s got a way of impacting with defenders that gets him over the advantage line more often than not and ready for a quick play-the-ball.

Across his two games he has posted 292 metres, breaking the line twice, and come up with 35 tackles.

Second-row: Manu Ma’u (Tonga)
I love the way Manu goes about his business. If you didn’t see him coming he would chop you in half. Even when you can brace for the hit, it has still got to hurt.

He’s a mainstay for Parramatta and is providing all of that toughness for a Tongan side that is picking up more fans every time it plays. Tonga can rely on him to play the full 80 minutes if necessary, which he did against the Kiwis.

Lock: Jason Taumalolo (Tonga)
You would be a fool if you left him out, wouldn’t you? He’s the most destructive player in the NRL and has been similarly powerful at the World Cup.

Tonga base their game around what players like Taumalolo are capable of doing and he hasn’t let them down, registering 540 metres (237 post-contact) and taking advantage of the inability of defenders to wrap him up by producing six offloads as well.

He’s like a block of flats on wheels.

(NRLPhotos/Scott Davis)

Special mentions
While I haven’t selected a bench for this exercise, it’s worth mentioning some of the other players who are lighting up the tournament.

Well done to Fiji centre Taane Milne, Tonga five-eighth Tuimoala Lolohea and Papua New Guinea fullback David Mead for the major contributions they have made.

Scotland prop Luke Douglas and France fullback Mark Kheirallah were among many other players who have battled hard against considerable odds for the so-called ‘minnow’ teams.

The world’s best are here! Don’t miss your chance to witness history at the 2017 RUGBY LEAGUE WORLD CUP. Buy your tickets here.

The Crowd Says:

2017-11-18T12:06:26+00:00

Robbo

Guest


Best idea is to have your best team when the tournament finishes- A few of the park footy Lebanese players did not look out of place in the 1/4 final against now second favourites Tonga -if any NRL Clubs have places available they could do no worse than give them a go - Doueihi, and Miski for instance

2017-11-16T19:49:29+00:00

Squidward

Roar Rookie


Special mentions. The itialian fullback. Wade graham. RCG.

2017-11-16T10:16:15+00:00

Sleiman Azizi

Roar Guru


We need to see Ireland play PNG as soon as possible. The revenge match! What a story!

2017-11-16T09:35:38+00:00

nerval

Guest


That's it! I've been racking/wracking (not sure which) my brain thinking about just who it is he reminds me of - and it is indeed Matt Utai. I don't know how genuinely quick he is, as he has thus far done most of his best work in tight, congested areas but he might yet have a chance to show us against England.

2017-11-16T07:02:30+00:00

Keith

Guest


How about the little Italian Fullback? Gary Lo? Sorry but Dugan and Cordner?

2017-11-16T04:06:04+00:00

matth

Guest


Yes, Liam Finn was outstanding in a team that exceeded everyone's expectations.

2017-11-16T04:04:35+00:00

matth

Guest


Gary Lo reminds me of Matt Utai who used to go around for the Bulldogs. Low centre of gravity, massive pumping thighs and very hard to bring down.

2017-11-16T01:26:19+00:00

The Barry

Roar Guru


Are you fair dinkum? Given that we've only had pool games played, you needed the headline to read "team of the pool games" to work out it wasn't an article about the team of the entire tournament.

2017-11-16T00:31:39+00:00

Jaime O'Donnell

Guest


Pretty good team Greg, I agree on Klemmer and I also think Taukeiaho has been outstanding. I would also like to note the efforts of Liam Finn and Liam Kay from Ireland, I agree with the general concencous here that Gary Lo has been fantastic on the wing for PNG, and I also thought that both Theo Fages and Craig Kopczak busted their guts for France and Wales respectively.

2017-11-15T23:44:17+00:00

Nat

Roar Guru


This is the 2nd, maybe 3rd article of the same genre by different authors. The article is about who, in the authors opinion, is playing well. They're the discussion points not the wording of the title.

2017-11-15T23:32:06+00:00

Raugeee

Guest


Didn't realise Tonga had beaten NZ without Jennings. They are a seriously good team. Wayne Bennett must be sweating bullets thinking about the PNG game. Of course England are expected to win, if they do well .. meh. Truth is PNG are a genuine threat. 50/50 calls are going to play a huge part. PNG have ball security problems but there's enough evidence there to think Tonga v NZ won't be the only boilover of the cup.

2017-11-15T23:13:46+00:00

alexandriablues

Roar Rookie


Well, that's not what the title says. These articles are usually titled "team of the pool games".

2017-11-15T23:10:05+00:00

Sleiman Azizi

Roar Guru


Team of the tournament... so far.

2017-11-15T23:08:07+00:00

alexandriablues

Roar Rookie


Team of the tournament... before the tournament is even over?

2017-11-15T22:58:13+00:00

Fox Lvy

Guest


The tournament is far from over..it should be called team after pool games..sounds ok! What will happen after it? Another team of the tournament? Just asking no hard feeling.

2017-11-15T22:39:25+00:00

Nat

Roar Guru


Hard to argue Greg. A little Tongan heavy but they are going well. Garry Lo, for mine, has been an excitement machine who will play his way into the NRL. Klemmer has really stepped up at rep level. Good to see an old-school prop tuck it under the wing and eat the meters.

2017-11-15T22:37:31+00:00

Rugby Realist

Guest


He backed it up with stats and analysis. But you knew that didnt you. Yes, i bit.

2017-11-15T22:17:03+00:00

Fox Lvy

Guest


with nothing to write about, ended up putting names he likes most and calls it team of the tournament..

2017-11-15T21:23:20+00:00

nerval

Guest


I think one must choose between Vunivalu and Mcgillvary on the right wing as PNG's Gary Lo, playing outside the top tier in England, has given new meaning to the term "pocket rocket." - with that low centre of gravity, he has been unstoppably explosive. I'd take the English hooker, James Roby, over Cameron Smith and would quibble with the honourable mention of Luke Douglas - the latter's handling has been atrocious. A few more players have yet to come to the fore...

2017-11-15T20:36:13+00:00

Haz

Guest


...I know right?..or he could have just waited until the Aussies win it and just say they are the team of the tournament ?

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